EtHeRuS

Friday, October 14, 2011

Cardinals second baseman Nick Punto (top) tags out Milwaukee Brewers centre fielder Carlos Gomez as he tries to steal second in the second inning on Friday night.

ST. LOUIS—The bumbling Brewers made four errors that led to three unearned runs, and the St. Louis Cardinals survived a short start by Jaime Garcia to beat Milwaukee 7-1 Friday night and take a 3-2 lead in the NL championship series.

Yadier Molina and Matt Holliday had three hits each for St. Louis, which jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the second when Molina doubled in a run and third baseman Jerry Hairston Jr. allowed Garcia’s grounder to go through his legs. Holliday capped the scoring with a two-run single in the eighth.

Milwaukee’s infield nearly had a cycle of errors, with second baseman Rickie Weeks and shortstop Yuniesky Betancourt also committing miscues along with reliever Marco Estrada. Weeks had committed the Brewers’ only two errors in the first four games of the series.

St. Louis can wrap up the best-of-seven series and its 18th NL pennant on Sunday in Milwaukee. Edwin Jackson goes for the Cardinals against Shaun Marcum in a rematch of pitchers from Game 2, won by St. Louis 12-3 as neither starter received a decision.

The NL winner hosts the World Series opener against Detroit or Texas on Wednesday.

Milwaukee had not made more than three errors in a game during the regular season, but the Brewers’ sloppiness reached a near-record level. Milwaukee was one shy of the LCS record for errors in a game, shared by the 1974 Los Angeles Dodgers and 1976 New York Yankees, according to STATS LLC.

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa had a quick hook once again. Garcia opened with four scoreless innings, then allowed three hits and a sacrifice in a span of four at-bats in the fifth. With two and on and two outs, Octavio Dotel relieved and struck out Ryan Braun.

Dotel (1-0) struck out two in 1 1/3 hitless innings, combining with three other relievers for 4 1/3 innings of scoreless, two-hit relief. Jason Motte got four outs for his second save of the series, leaving Cardinals relievers 2-0 with a 1.66 ERA in 22 2/3 innings. St. Louis starters are 1-2 with a 6.04 ERA.

“Our bullpen has been incredible,” Holliday said after the game. “You’d like your starters to go deeper but when you got a bullpen that’s as deep as ours you’ve got an option.”

Only one St. Louis starter has lasted long enough to qualify for a victory, with Chris Carpenter working five innings in Game 3. The previous team to have a starter not pitch into the sixth in the first five games of a post-season series was the 1984 San Diego Padres in the World Series, according to STATS.

With Milwaukee down 5-1 and trying to rally with two on in the eighth, former Blue Jays lefty Marc Rzepczynski relieved and struck out Prince Fielder.

Fielder is 0-for-4 with four strikeouts and two walks against Rzepczynski.

Zack Greinke (1-1) left pitches over the plate in some key spots and allowed five runs — just two earned — and seven hits in 5 2/3 innings with no strikeouts and two walks.

Corey Hart had three hits, breaking out from a 1-for-12 start to the series.

St. Louis had been hitless in 15 at-bats with runners in scoring position — and 22 at-bats with runners on base — before Molina’s RBI double off the right-field fence. Hart just missed on a leaping attempt at the right-field fence.

Hairston saved at least one run at third base with a spectacular diving catch to his left on Nick Punto’s low liner for the second out. But when he botched Garcia’s easy grounder, St. Louis was up 3-0.

Garcia’s RBI groundout made it 4-0 in he fourth, the first RBI by a Cardinals pitcher in the post-season since Jeff Suppan homered in the 2006 NLCS against the Mets.

Albert Pujols had an RBI single in the sixth to chase Greinke.

NOTES: Braun doubled in the first and has reached base safely in the opening inning of nine straight games, going 7-for-7 with a walk and hit by pitch. He has 22 hits in the post-season, matching the franchise record by Paul Molitor and Robin Yount. . . . Chuck Berry, a St. Louis musical icon, performed the national anthem with his daughter, Ingrid. Wearing his trademark sailor’s cap and a No. 84 Cardinals jersey (his age), Berry mostly watched and threw in occasional harmony. . . . Cards Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith threw out the ceremonial first pitch before the game.

Al Davis Had An Eye For Talent 2 Decades Ago

Al Davis the Oakland Raiders owner passed recently. The 82 year old Davis was called a dictator behind his back. Davis was the “brains behind the AFL-NFL merger the curator of the downfield passing game”. The facilities he put his teams in were the worst in the NFL. Back in the day, Davis had an eye for talent. Rescuing Jim Plunkett once the San Francisco 49ers waived him in 1977 and signing 13 Hall of Famers. Al Davis was “infallibly loyal to his players and officials: to be a Raider was to be a Raider for life” Once he turned on you it was WAR.

Al Davis Benched Marcus Allen Over Jealousy

He hired Tom Cable, as head coach, a former Raiders assistant, then fired him in 2010, in 9 seasons he fired 6 coaches. He fired Mike Shanahan then refused to pay the remaining $250,000 on his contract. He fired Kiffin after less than two seasons and tried to get out on what remained of Kiffin’s $6 million deal. He benched Hall of Fame RB Marcus Allen for 2 years for absolutely no reason but jealousy, inspiring fans to wear “Free Marcus” T-shirts. Allen sued, then became the NFL Comeback Player of the Year in Kansas City.

Al Davis Was Angry Even When They Were Winning

Al Davis was the sweetest old geezer in the world, if you were on his good side or had something he needed. Even when the Raiders won he looked miserable, Davis spitting, cussing, and ready to fight. Yes, Al Davis’ catchy “Just win, baby” became a mantra that transcended sports. Just win, baby, no matter who you have to cripple to get there. The problem is, people take only so much trampling. In 1983, Davis would’ve had Stanford QB John Elway. Davis needed to do a three-way deal with Chicago and Baltimore, but the Bears hated him. So Broncos owner Edgar Kaiser, a guy that knew absolutely nothing about football, walked in at the last minute and got the player who would lead the team to five Super Bowls.